I think it would be best not to try to translate English phrases into Japanese. Just say ちょっとお聞きしたいんですけど、この漢字はどう読みますか。 If this is a friend, just say ちょっといい？この漢字はどう読むの？

In general, it's better to stick to normal Japanese patterns rather than try to translate from English -- if you are a non-native speaker, a Japanese person already has to work hard to understand your accent and intonation, and if your Japanese is not something that they expect to hear in the context, that makes it even harder to figure out what you're saying.

Last edited by Yudan Taiteki on Sun 08.26.2007 11:20 am, edited 1 time in total.

As a side note, in general the そう gets attached to the i-adjective minus the i (i.e. たかそう, おもしろそう). いい is an exception in that the more formal version よい is used (よさそう); this is the same as the negative being よくない and such.

Also note that kirei ne, and kawaii ne isn't the same.
Kawaii is an i-adjective, and kirei is a na-adjective. kirei da ne would be somewhat equal to kawaii ne. Though female speech tend to use the da-less version.

However okikishitai is not really necessary, kikitain desu is enough.
And I also think the shortversioned けど is improper to use with such a formal expression as okikishitai, so maybe use the full version keredomo, or ga. I think maybe ga is more used in these kinds of expressions. Not entirely sure about that.

Personally I don't think there's anything wrong with "o-kiki sitai" and "kedo" together, but certainly you can use "ga" there if you feel like it. (o-kiki sitai isn't really "formal", it's polite -- IMO there's a difference between formality and politeness.)

きれいね does not mean 'you look good'. It means '(something--exactly what depends on the context of the conversation since its implied not stated) is pretty, isn't it?'. Because the ね is seeking confirmation from the hearer, you wouldn't use it in a compliment because the other person can't very well answer, はい、私はきれいですよ ("Yes I am pretty"). The same applies to かわいいね

I don't know if I agree that you cannot use ね in giving complements. 日本語お上手ですね is the classic; I don't think the ね is literally looking for agreement (はい、上手ですよ) or confirmation, it's just connecting with the listener.

(I would agree that きれいだね might not be understood as "you look pretty", but I'm not sure.)

Yudan Taiteki wrote:Personally I don't think there's anything wrong with "o-kiki sitai" and "kedo" together, but certainly you can use "ga" there if you feel like it.

I just remember when I had a conversation with my teacher this last semester, I remember I said kedo. And she commented that I should not use kedo when speaking politely, because kedo is a shortened form and thus not so polite, and she said using the fullversion would be more appropriate. That is my only source for this so. I just based it on that.